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Moadny Aftentoea
The News-Herald.
Twice a Week. .
=*= ! :
Wriuil Organ Gwinnett County.
$1 a Year In Advance.
——————————
Uvraiicfvfllf PaMlsMng Co., Vr*pii*tor».
Fill »r.i\ a* MkHind-oUMI mallei .1 u. >
ID4C 4i t ,i* r> Mfn.U ’<•,«i l.nwronrOTl le. G*
finilir tiro Act of March A. IS7D.
a " *•'
c.:m. morcock,
Lossoel and Publisher.
MON. W. W. WILSON.
Hon. W. W. Wilson, of Buford,
answering the call of many friends,
has consented to enter the race
for representative from Gwinnett,
and his formal announcement can
he found elsewhere in this issue of
the News-Hera Id.
He makes the fourth entry, and
now the voters have a quartette of
good men from which to pick the
two whom they wish .o represent
them in the lower branch of the
general assembly.
Mr. Wilson is a confederate sol
dier and saw active service under
Lee and Longstreet.
He has likewise had legislative
experience. He represented this
eonuty two terms in the legisla
ture and proposes to stand or fall
bv his record. He claims to have
answered every roll call, and
promises, as before, to vote on
every bill that comes up and not
dodge a single issue
DtCk IN-HOKB 01 T.
It is »CAteJ. on pretty good Author
ity, that ex-Gov«>riior Hoke Smith
will not he a candidate for governor
at tli* next democratic primary, but
thatJudee Richard B. Ru#*«dl will
bo in the race.
Governor Smith has acted wisely,
as a defeat would have permanently
eliminated him from future prefer
ment, whereas he remains a potent
farter in Georgia polities# if he is dis
creet enough not to align himself
with either faction iu the coming
primary election. H# is a man of
pre-eminent ability, and the time is
coining wbeu the state will demand
his services in a wider held of activ
ity. unless he so conducts himself as
to become a recv'gnised ally of one of
the warring elements in the demo
cratic party es Georgia,
On th# other hand. Judge Russell
has committed the greatest indiscre
tion of his life, and will never cease
to regret his hasty and i: co. siderate
action, ascertain and overwhtlming
defeat stare# him iu th# face,
w by do we say this ?
In the first place, he virtually de
clares himself tv' be the candidate of
the liquor interests, whsu he an
nounce* that the centra, plank in bis
platform will be one in favor of local
optica, which means the return of
the cp#n barroom into all the laxce
cities in the state.
Georgia is ia the prohibition col
umn to stay, and the candidate who
declare# himself tn faTor v'f taking it
out, wr of giving the people in anv
particular locality an so port unity to
bring the whisky traffic back, seals
his d#om with the declaration.
Iu the second place, he makes a
very serious mistake when he ao
noar.e«# his intentiou to remain on
the bench through the campaign, so
as to be sure of a job in case of de
feat.
A big" judicial officer has neither
the mcral or legal right to beemirch
tbs ermine by becoming actively eu
gagvvi iu partisan politic#, either as
a candidate or otherwise. Hi# best
friend#, whe respect Uie charts and
desire to see them kept clear. ai-J
above reproach, will not stand for
eueb conduct.
In the tbirvl pi ace. Gov error Rrowr.
ha* |lven the state an able, clear,
fair, boemees like, aud satiefactory
*dcoi»is*r*bou, eutftie-d to a
s*cen4 term if be want* it. A* to
whether he wilt Mk for re-election
wo have no information. but the pre
sumption >» that be will. His r*fu»-
An auuouucemeut u? to
the present time i* commendable,
ie fca4 only been inaugurated a few
***** before eertaiu nowopoper re-
Kuler* nudertook to jet him to de
cJaTs hi* totendons as to ruin,ing
»»rOiO. fle:ia4two eotitfoUin* reo-
aoai for refusing so make any .lecla
raiion.
In I lie flint \ lace, It would h$V«»
been absolutely Indecent, as well as
an evidence of weakness for him to
have done so at that Mme. In the
second place, he knew that whenever
he made public announcement of Ills
purpose to stand for a second tsrm, a
hot campaign would begin, and his
determination t«> save ths people from
the turmoil, bitterness and excite
ment incident to such a contest, as
long ** possible la sincerely approved
by the people, regardless of allgment
during the last campaign
Hl’om.h'M #F AMt'KICAN MURDERS.
“Teu thousand persons arc mur-
dered iu this country every year,
shot, strangled, poisoned, stabbed,
!or beaten with a club or a sand
bag. Of the murderers two in
every hundred are punished. The
remaining ninety-eight go abac*
lutelyfree.ln many of our states the
proportions of the convictions ia
only half as great. lu Georgia.
tor instance, only one murderer in
| every hundred is punished. Iu a
recent census of American crime,
digesting the nation as a whole,
the statement was made that in
ouly 1-8 per rent of our homicides
do we secure a conviction.
“Chicago averages lIS murders
in a year. Iu the same space of
time Paris records only fifteen
murders and attempted murders.
, Loudon, four times the size of
Chicago, has only twenty murders.
In the course of twelve months.
Georgia—a tvpical example of the
average American state recordsj
forty-five homicides—more than
the whole of the British Empire.
More people are murdered iu this
country iu a year than killed on
railroads. In three years the vic
tims of our murder eases total
more than the hv** of the British
army in the Boer war.*’
A Substitute For War.
Peace advocates, who have done
; much to foster at least a theoretic
| repugnance tv' war, make their ap
peal to reason and the moral
sense They paint tbs horrors of
battle and the misery and injus
tice tha; are inseparable from
war. but for the most pan they
ignore the virtues which war de
velop#.
That such virtues exist. *::d ar
[not merely important 'ut funda
mental to national strength *»»•<
character. *ome even of the most
pacific m?nde*i person perceive:
and fboy argue that the inherited
taste for war. the inborn rtsstiuet
which has come down tkremgh a
thousand generations ancestors
w :>o had to fight, wiil never be got
r.tuber until some substitute is pro
vided which wal breed and cherish
|th» warlike virtues.
6O C CURES
MALARIA
kLuers# » a ypecLos of b-kxxi pc vert y a* mae~
tstia. It is a ccmditioa hi which the crrmjetica is so
weak ac-d imptav that R is suable to seppiy the systetn
with scS-nert and strength to preserve
ordinary heahh.
The me-ivcal rvc-teasioc is drrided ir. cpinioo as
to the manner iu whicb wmlanal guts into tie
blood. Pome take tie position that it is an a tracer heric
poison, the speerfm germs of which are breathed into the
'nnge and thus transmitted to the cirmlatsou. Other?
advance the or men that persms become iaoenrated with
the LvMtv'e. thrngh the bfies of mosqnitaa- All however
agroJt.lt MALARIA is a blood afectiu*. and any treat
meat to racoessfully overcome it must co. oo!y pnrify
tkis vital Sufd. bet at the same time add tie necessary
qualities of rohoe-ss and strength to the eircditicc
The malarial poieou destroys large numbers of the rich, red corpnsc'.es
cd the ctroulatoon and the permits-' paleness of anaemic persons vs due’tothis
a nrrsacAi. wwxck.
Darn# 14>CC 1 vu TWifir a
fiiw ca KeeieeipcA atut.
b ■ •—i ■ we iw*rv*c.kJif-i with
k*lmu Utt Sor » fit;
!#«•• ykrotvl WTwek. I*e: k a
rvbW •# M#ictaM rwMiii
ytr.itn. eAi-1 eur#«
•si eras-. ?at<e». kalstU
itd. m-« uy fww& aa t 3 I
t« ME *tai I iit ebc-- ~ *
nmli #vt tiii
•TUr KTtn. l.nlfi si t -*
UwttiM t vu a# w«. - vs.l eare*«
a# 1 »wr vm, i&4 Un mtw ‘ 11
* All! HSH. 1 54! tii*
S .&.6 #v«*-r vva.' li a*e»v»nsiv®.
l-4 wewM iJriM ytfri’SiT «. **
v# failew my
A * * OCW^ST.
the cae* tS> *C «c&i free oar book <* tie blood sri at tie bate :«r
pbvsxieae will p« «h aoc* metical adrace tiat will be of freak «anr « to
yoa i* cartag ymcttii wit* SS S. Xo ckacjre for tie bock cr advioe
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO, AILASTA, 3A.
Prof. William James is one of
those who view the matter in this
light. "Intrepidity, contempt of
softness, surrender of private in
terest, obedience to command,
must still be the rock upon which
states are bnilt,” he declares. His
remedy is to direct man’s pugna
city against the forers of nature
rather than against hi* brother
man. Oue can hardly pat the
idea natter than in Professor
James's own words:
"There is nothing to make one
indignant in the mere fact that
life is hard, that men must toil
and sutler pain. The planetary
conditions once for all are such,
and we cau stand it. But that so
many men, by mere acoidents of
birth and opportunity, should
havv a lifs of nothing else but toil
and pain and hardness and infer
iority imposed upon them—should
have no vacation, while others no
mors deserving never get- any taste
of this campaigning life at all —
this is capable of arousing indig
nation in reflective minds.
"If, now, instead of military
conscription, there were a con-
I scription of the whole youthful
population to form for a certain
j number of years a part of the
army enlisted against nature, the
’ injustice would tend to lie evened
j out.
“The military ideals of hardi-
I ,
hood and discipline would be
wrought into the growing fiber of
the people. To coal and iron
mines, to freight trains, to fishing
fleets in December, to dish wash
ing. clothes washing, window
washing, to road building and
tunnel making, to foundries and
stoke holes, and to the frames of
sky scrapers would our glided
youths be drafted otT, according
t » their choice, to get the childish
ness knocked out of them and to
e nae back into society with
. valthier aympatbies and sourer
ideas."
The suggestion has in it some
thing noble enough to be called
Flatooic: and ;f the objection be
made that it is ”»ot practical/'
let u» remember that. much >4
Plato which has moor been po*
intv' actual practice k»s yet nevvr
t he-less profoaadly influenced ba
rn**: life. —i'he Youth s Compan
ion
i »ve: ts e uuie r i> - xervi»a
r##a "v. l'vv»u’> Bej-us-ls »Hi
v out t* stipw . rt>rr it.viuc# »
mild, t .->■ ecinfnl acnot. of f «
bowel, without griping Ask your
druggist ior teem. £c
The only qnvskioaDow is whether
Col. K: sevelt w II a= dish the
House of L n s. or merely reform
it.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER S
CASTO R I A
fact. In the firs: stages of Milar.s the:;
is a bilious coadrtioo of the system
constant bodily weakness poor ap:e
tite. and a n o account, tired feeling.
SSS searches oat and destroys
e-rerv r-artiole of malarial infection anc
bn. ids the blood up to a healthy nour
ishing condition Then the system re
ceives its required nutnmeat tne bright
red ccnpuscles begin to multiply in the
circulation sallow eomplenioas grow
ruddy and unshed with health, the liver
and d-.rescin are righted, the appetite
imoroved. and the system vgalired *nc
refreshed ia every way. S S.S. as a safe
and pleasant remedy as well as an £ — •
cteut one. If yin have Malaria we wil,
S; delta hive voc Trr.te is describing
. ®. .. , •>
TMF. NRWS-ffERAL*.
A Good Example
“1 amt a good example,* writes Mrs. R >> Xr*BeH" of
McAlcster, Okl«., "of what Caidwi wffl dw.kr, suffering
wsmcK
‘1 ruffe red wtfli my hmtd and bade; for ffter snt years,
and although I tried everything, I never rorskl get aer
thingto do me any food, until I began te take Cardui.
Cardui has surely helped me and tariff me up and I
am so thankful that I have found something that will do
me good. 1 fed so much stronger aed better than I have
in a long time."
It it well to make up row mmd before you are rick
what medicine you w4U take when you are rick.
I* CARDUI
The Woman’s Tonic
You will be glad to take it when you are tired, mis
erable and when lffa seems a weary grind. It will put
new thoughts into your head, fresh courage into your mind.
If not sick now, at least bura Cardui on to the pages
of your memory, so that when you are sick you will ask
for it without thinking.
If sick or weak, get a bottle today. At all druggists.
Write to: Lidlct' Advisory Dept.. Cbattuoefa MeOwisc Co.. Ciattawiocga, Term.,
for Special Interactions, and 64-pace book. "Home Treatmeoi far Women.” sent free.
Coffee! Coffee! Coffee!
Diamond A 20c Old* Reliable 25c Sledge Bbis 1 -5 c
Diamond B 25c Moca & Java 35c Arbuckles
Green Coffee 15c; Luzianne
Shoop’s Health Coffee
Chocolates
Post urn
Cereals And U-OCOcLS
AT
R. L. Robinson's
G. B. CLACK,
General Merchandise.
I £,m located in the E. S. Brooks store, next door to the
Cornett hotel, and I cordially solicit the palronage of every
body. I carry in stock a nice lice of
MEN’S and BOY’S CLOTHINC, HATS, SHOES,
SKIRTS and UNDERWEAR,
A nice line of Dry Goods & Notions.
e
#
A nice fresh line of Fancy and Heavy Groceries, a full
• ;ne of Feed Stun, Grain. Hay. Seed Oats, all kinds, which
I will sell as cheap as possible.
Yours to please,
G. B. Clack.
Special Summer Rates
Write for full information TODAY. Big new catalogue
free by mail. 57 colleges in 16 states; £IOO,OOO in equip
ment; model office department; actual bustusss training; earn
while j-ou learn; positions guaranteed; expert specialists; in
dividual instruction: we also teach by mail. Better buy a
postal card and write me TODAY.
Arthur C. Minter, Genera! Manager,
DRAUGHOVS PRACTICAL BUSINESS COLLEGE.
Atlanta. Macon. Montgomery, Knoxville, Greenville, S. C.
Send Us Your Job Work
may 16, IQTn
LOW ROUND TRIP RATES
VIA
Southern Railway
FROM ATLANTA l
WASHINGTON, D. C, $23.25
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Tickets on sale May Bth, 9th and
10th, limited to reach original utart.
in* point returning not later than
midnight, June Ist.
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limited to reach original .tartinil
point returning not later than
29th. " ay
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Tickets on sale May 15th. 16th and
for trains scheduled to arrive inOhar
lotte before noon May 17th, limited
to rsach original starting point re
turning not latrr than May 2Ut.
Richmond. $22.05
Tickets on sale April 30th, Mav let
and 2d, limited to reach original
starting poiat returning not iater
thau Slay ItTh.
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Tickets on sale May 16th and 17th
and for trains scheduled to arrive in
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limited to reach original starting
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ing part returning not later than mid
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IBth, limited u> reach original start
ing point returning not later than
midnight, June Ist
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Tickets on sale May I6th. I7th and
18th, limited to reach original start
ing point returning not later than
midnight. June stb.
Low Rateslto Atlanta.
Ticket# on sale May 23d, 24th and
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lanta May 25th, limited to reach orig
inal starting point not later than mid
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Proportionately low rates from
other points. Apply to Southern rail
way ticket agent# tor complete infoi
raation.
J. L. Meek, Jas. Freeman,
A##t.Gen.Pass. Agt. Diet. Pass. Agt.
Atlanta, Ga.
S E ABOARD
AIR LINE RAILWAY.
SOUTHBOUND.
No. 41 ?Wam
\,v ■” ftnl
No* 3S -” 4 33 pm
KORTH BOUND.
S? / iiium
K? S // 11 05 Bin
LOO A* VTXJ.K BBAKCV
Arrives » * am and P®
Departs S’ loam and . naj
Libel for Divorce.
Georgia. Gwlanett Conr.tv: • A- Go ™|
vs. Mary E. Gober. .Complaint t«l
divorce. To Mary E. Gober. C.ree> nf I
Yon nr- hereby repaired to be and* ‘JJSJJI
at the June term. 1910.0 f /, I
Cour* to answer to petit.!
Witi ss the Hoeorebifl
of,a:d court. This Ayr- . _
Gwir.nelt Co.. I A I
nature
' Reads an Assistant I
The com la the fencer’s bin doeenotP-anjl
itself. No more can Name. e.oae I
aided, elvers perform the enormous ■
that are so often forced cron her.
Neftrre iVeetfe *n Assistant I
Perfect health is the reed: of study J
research. It has taken cenmr.es to -- B
•land the human bodr and to rir.d Tl
conditions and remedies io jermop
fni equilibrium, ■ vyJ
Any one with a sick etomsh. n S
er. bilious, constipated and
at ail likely to rewain their headh
Aefcnw Ateedi an Assistant
BT. JOSEPH’S
Liver Regulator!
IS KATVSTS SHT ASS.S TJV'I
This remedy has proven i»--* '.he*- -
tried friefid of the humin u afl
prompt relief when taken for -yr pjjfl
Indigestion. Biliooeneaa. *•?!»•=•*•**’y*
ness or ocher tronblea Inciden; to» 1
inactive liver and a cJo*s*-_ / we r,«
It is a pleasant remedy o.
Nature's asartant in t-e h-*---• (cr3 ,®
is made in both h-cnid an- po - *
pleasant and aareeeb 'e to "~.feeiwjs
in action, and learea no sci«—
ini after effect*. , . B
It l, mm I Seal Urer
We hare a kite number
saiLsned patrons who naro I** 3 t
and cured by it j,,*
St. Joeeph'a Ltw Ra * u ;i or*®
by dmxrsas and fenera. =-• y ?:<*
can send to ns for it. y , - Cc s*
a bottle. Powders, in t n *•
box. Sample of powders *— I
free ob eppScatiom B
G CASTLE MEOICiNE CO^B
FOLEYSH^Sf
«tee« the oo«eh s“° h